âBegin.â
Henry took a breath as Kelmithusâ words faded from his earpiece. He fell into the center of Alpha Teamâs wedge, moving forward alongside his team.
As he stepped into the makeshift battlefield, he somehow felt almost⦠excited. Nervous, perhaps, but excited for sure. This wasnât the Ranch or Olympus â no OpFor here, just a couple of magic-slingers who could probably turn him into a frog if he fucked up. Well, it wasnât a spell heâd ever learned about or seen, but hey, who was he to say what magic was capable of?
He couldnât help but snort at the absurdity of it all as they cleared the entryway ahead. Here they were, decked out in cutting-edge gear, about to play magical paintball. It was a bit of a surprise; he had actually expected simmunition, but it seemed paintball was more palatable to the locals â apparently most were pretty wary about having realistic guns pointed at them. If only his old drill sergeant could see him now.
But as ridiculous as it felt, he knew they werenât here to just fuck around. Those Nobian assassins had been crafty bastards, sure, but they were killers first, magic-users second. The bandits? Hardly worth the ammo. Arran and Kelmithus? Now these guys were the real deal â mages trained from the ground up to fight with magic alone. And maybe a sidearm in Kelmithusâ case. Either way, it was time to lock in and see if all those mind-numbing lectures on magical theory would hold up in the field.
Past the entryway was a large arena. It was hard to get a sense of the scale just from the ground level, but he could tell the Archmageâs efforts werenât just for show. It wasnât quite like Olympusâ killhouses, but it was damn solid for something that was cooked up in a few minutes. Low walls of packed earth snaked across the field, forming crude rooms and corridors. Past the plaza ahead, boulders and scrubby vegetation broke up the landscape, providing a mix of hard cover and concealment. The whole setup was a far cry from the flat clearing theyâd walked in on.
Ron moved up, crouching behind a waist-high wall ahead. He scanned the half-formed archway at 2 oâclock, confirming it was clear. Good. That wouldâve been quite the spot for Arran to pop out and start slinging spells. Ryan had the right flank, shooting back another confirmation for the corridor stretching from 10 to 11. Yeah, theyâd probably want to avoid that if they couldnât find Arran with the drone â potential choke point.
Henryâs nose twitched at the earthy smell of freshly moved dirt. He wouldâve loved to say it reminded him of his parentsâ garden, but there was one memory that took the forefront â those earth roots. Probably wouldnât be an issue with Arran, given the kid wasnât quite on Kelmithusâ level, but the possibility remained.
Perimeter secured, Henry allowed himself a moment to breathe. He caught the Docâs eye, nodding toward him. The Doc knew what came next, already reaching for the drone.
With just a touch of a button, the Black Hornetâs rotors spun up. It rose from Dr. Andersonâs palm, hanging in the air for a split second before zipping upward. Man, no matter how many times he saw it, the little piece of tech never failed to impress. Hell, having one couldâve saved an arm and a leg many times over for lots of guys heâd talked to.
His IVAS pinged as the droneâs feed came online. The top-down view replaced his minimap â a whole new perspective on their makeshift arena. From up there, Kelmithusâ handiwork was even more apparent. He scanned through the feed â no movement, no defenses, no sign of Arran. Doc mustâve seen the same lack of Arran, since he switched to thermals. And there it was, near a cluster of boulders about 80 meters out, concealed by an alcove of earth. One heat signature, humanoid, crouched low: Arran.
A new ping popped up on Henryâs HUD â Dr. Anderson marking Arranâs position. Looked like the kid was planning an ambush. With magic traps? Heâd have to get closer to check for EMF readings, but even then, they wouldnât be accurate enough to point out specific traps â only enough to warn him that there was some spell in the area. Oh, how he wished Lamarr could MacGyver an EMF sensor onto the Black Hornet, but that sounded more fantastical than the real magic heâd seen.
Now, options. What could they do here? A direct approach was out of the question, and the possibility of magic traps around those boulders remained extremely high. Chances are, Arran probably only had the time to lay down traps in his immediate vicinity; they'd have to engage him at range.
Flanking was the obvious choice, but obvious didn't always mean wrong. If they could draw Arran's attention in one direction while maneuvering around... yeah, that could work. Ryan was their best shot, and those low walls to the left offered decent cover for a flanking route. Meanwhile, the rest of his team could cover all the angles around that boulder.
It was impossible to predict how Arran would react, but it was the simplest option.
Henry highlighted a path for Ryan on his HUD then pointed at the man, fist with thumb down, then left. Ryan blinked once, a slight nod. Message received.
Henry tapped his own chest, flat hand push forward, twice. He was gonna draw fire from a mage. Not exactly standard infantry school stuff, but hell, when had anything about this world been standard?
For Ron, Isaac, and Dr. Anderson â hand raised, fingers spread, then a sweeping motion outward. Theyâd disperse, spreading out to cover multiple angles.
Movement confirmed that they got the memo. Henry allowed Ron to take point as they crept forward, using the walls and terrain to mask their approach.
Henry laid down by a shrub for concealment while everyone else skulked around the edges like they were prepping to get the jump on Bin Laden. Was it overkill? Yeah, probably. Against a mage? Well, no such thing as overkill.
The closer they got to those boulders, the more his skin tingled. Reminded him of static before a lightning strike, only constant. The EMF readings on his HUD ticked up as they approached. Ambient mana, or Arran building up charge for a spell? Tough to say. This region was after all ground zero for the duel earlier.
He glanced to the left. Couldnât see Ryan past the walls and obstacles, the Black Hornet above confirmed he was in position and ready. Now, to draw Arran out and get him to commit. What better way than a little misdirection?
Henry pulled the trigger, sending three paintballs flying toward Arran. Bright splotches splattered against the right boulder.
Arran took the bait almost immediately. He rounded the boulder, exposing his entire body as he prepared to fight back. Amateur move. Well, in terms of positioning. The instant firebolts that formed over his head suggested a different kind of expertise, though not quite enough to make up for everything else.
A rapid succession of pops came from the left â Ryan, right on cue. Arran sent the firebolts upward, raising his hand as he recognized the hits.
âTarget neutralized,â Ryan announced.
Arran stepped out. âWell played, Alpha Team.â
Surprisingly, they didnât even get to apply what theyâd learn from Kelmithus. Half an hour of wargaming against a mage wasnât nearly enough to say for sure, but it looked like their basic tactics were enough for most magic users â no surprise there considering their performance against the bandits and Nobians.
A part of him had expected â maybe even hoped for â some spectacular magical duel. But this? This was better. Still, Henry knew better than to get cocky. One successful little bout didnât mean they had it all figured out. Phase 1 was just the warm up. Kelmithus would have tougher challenges in store, guaranteed.
âThus concludes Phase One,â the Archmage said. âA commendable showing. Now, steel yourselves for a change in the field of battle.â
The ground began to tremble as the low walls and pseudo-structures sank back into the ground. Henry tilted his head to the left, directing his team back to the tents while Kelmithus spent some time restructuring the arena.
The field warped and twisted, spitting out buildings like a 3D printer on steroids. The mapping software on his IVAS struggled to keep up, error messages flashing as it tried to process the impossible.
The general layout was simple enough â recreation of the middle-class section of Eldraloreâs market district, complete with almost a dozen buildings and a central square. He caught a few glimpses of unique features before the walls came up completely. The four-story in the middle? Perfect overwatch position. The narrow alleys through the main promenade? Dangerous choke points.
Kelmithus wasnât done yet, but Henry had seen enough to know what he wanted to do. âYen, Doc â you two on overwatch. The four-story in the main square looks like itâll have good sight lines for most of the arena.â
Henry gave a quick nod to Ryan and Ron. âTight triangle formation. Owens, you're point. Hayes, left flank. I'll take right and rear. Three meter dispersion, ready to break on my signal. Ron, you're primary breach. Let us know if you see any tells. Weâll leave the center once the minimapâs updated.â
The rumbling stopped, the last of the buildings solidifying into place. Kelmithusâ voice carried across their headsets. âAlpha Team, preparations for Phase Two are complete. Are you prepared?â
Henry looked back at the hill. The Archmage didnât seem tired at all. Or if he was, he showed no sign of it. âYup. Weâre ready.â
âThirty minutes for this phase. Begin.â
Ron took point as they entered the conjured district. Surprisingly, their boots barely kicked up dust; though freshly formed, the earthen streets had been compacted enough to mimic the real deal. No sound but their own movement as they pushed through â the magical construct was a dead zone, devoid of the ambient noise one would expect in a real urban environment.
They made for the central structure, a four-story cube of packed earth that would give Isaac and the Doc the vantage they needed. No sign of Arran so far.
âYen, Doc,â Henry said as they reached the entrance. âGet topside and start your sweep. Radio when youâre set.â
They watched the main square in the meantime. Again, no sign. Seemed like the kid wasnât interested in the primary POI, probably plotting an ambush somewhere in the tighter areas. He wouldnât be surprised if Arran had anticipated theyâd take the tower in the middle; that would narrow down the search areas to blind spots where the local architecture blocked lines of sight from Isaacâs position.
âMinimap should be updated.â Dr. Andersonâs words accompanied the shift in their HUDs.
Perfect. Henry nodded to Ron and Ryan. âLetâs move. East side first. Weâll go counterclockwise.â
They spread into their wedge, Ron at the helm, Henry and Ryan on the flanks. The buildings around the main square looked pretty normal, but as they started their search along the roads not taken, something felt off.
Henryâs eyes narrowed. Yeah, he knew exactly what was off. Windows. Fucking windows everywhere. Every cube of packed earth was riddled with them, from ground level to the top floors. There were even some diagonal ones, likely positioned adjacent to staircases. It was an infantrymanâs nightmare, a shooting gallery where they were the ducks.
âYouâve gotta be fucking kidding me,â Ryan spat. The man sounded half amused and half annoyed.
Yeah, that was exactly how Henry felt. Probably Ron too, based on his sigh. He had to hand it to Kelmithus â the old mage sure knew how to make things interesting.
His gaze shifted from the windows to the layout of the streets. Shit. As if the windows werenât enough. The Archmage hadnât just given them a thousand potential sniper nests â heâd funneled them into a killing zone. The road ahead was barely wide enough for two men to walk abreast, hemmed in by the sides of the buildings. No side entrances, no alternate routes. Just one long, narrow corridor of certain death if Arran decided to open up from any of those windows.
It was straight up urban warfare nightmare fuel. Henry suppressed a grim chuckle. Kelmithus might not have combat experience, but the crafty bastard was a real quick learner. Just a few weeks with them and he already knew how to create THE tactical clusterfuck. Itâd be a pain in the ass, but that was the point, wasnât it? This wasnât some half-assed training ground; hell, this wasnât even the real deal. It was worse: stress inoculation at its finest.
Part of him wanted to groan at the challenge. The rest of him? Well, heâd be lying if he said he wasnât looking forward to it. Getting through a worst-case scenario was pretty exciting.
Looked like this road was clear. âYen, sitrep.â
âAll quiet up here,â Isaac replied. âNo movement on the skyline.â
âDroneâs coming up empty too,â Dr. Anderson added.
The fake town was quiet as a tomb. They couldnât take too long, either, since they had a time limit. 30 minutes was more forgiving than the first phaseâs 15, but not nearly enough to carefully clear out all the buildings. More than enough if they just walked along the fatal funnels and didnât bother with each and every room.
It was only a matter of time before Arran showed up on one of the windows. Why hide away in a corner for a stalemate when he could get easy pickings from one of the million windows?
It didnât take too long to be proven right. Ron slipped into a doorway, taking cover. Henry and Ryan instantly imitated Ronâs move. âSecond to last building on the left, second story windows.â
Sure enough, there was a flicker of movement â a shadow. Now, if there was one saving grace about the layout of the district, it was the fact that the entrances worked both ways. One way in, one way out.
The big question now: had Arran seen them? If he hadnât, they might have a chance to approach undetected. But if he hadâ¦
Henry couldnât be sure. They couldnât afford uncertainty.
âAlright,â Henry decided. âHayes, suppression. Owens, weâre bounding. Stick to the left, come up on his blind spot. Letâs move.â
Ryan opened up with a volley from his paintball marker, splattering the windows ahead. Whether by inexperienced surprise or deliberate awareness, Arran immediately responded. Fog rolled in faster than he could react, engulfing them in seconds. Well, so much for breach and clear.
âWeâve lost visual,â Isaac said. âFogâs too thick. Youâre on your own down there.â
Shit, there went the sniper support. âYup. Doc, bring that drone closer; park it at the intersection ahead of us.â
He strained his ears, listening for any sound that might point to Arranâs position. It was nothing compared to the Nobian assassins back at GB-2. No invisibility magic here, no silent footsteps. Just fog. And unlike those assassins, Arran couldnât hide his body heat. Nor could he hide the disturbances in this mist as he moved. It was nothing they couldnât handle, but still dangerous if they got sloppy.
âNothing on infrared,â Dr. Anderson reported. âHe must still be inside.â
They approached the doorway, stacking up on either side. Couldnât really pie corners with all the fog. It sucked, but there was still a time limit.
Ron moved in first. He barely cleared the doorway before he hit the deck, landing on his back and keeping his weapon trained toward the room ahead. Henry joined him, using the doorframe as partial cover as he leaned in.
A bolt of energy â probably some sort of stunning spell from Arran â sizzled through the space where Ronâs torso had been a split second earlier. Henry opened fire at the direction where the spell came from.
âOh.â Muffled surprise confirmed at least one hit had found its mark.
A light gust of wind cleared the fog. âWell played.â Arran raised his hands in surrender.
They stepped out of the alley and into the main square, allowing Kelmithus to prepare for the next phase. Theyâd won this round, sure, but the margin was a bit too close for comfort. If it had been a version of Ron â or anyone else in Alpha Team for that matter â with magic, they probably wouldâve been cooked. A mage with no experience in urban warfare? Easy pickings. A mage with even a modicum of experience? Thatâd be a real issue.
If anything, the whole ordeal taught him one important thing: they were missing a ballistic shield. Heâd have to ask for a couple from Chief Cole to stuff in the Holding Cart, at least until they could get their hands on and test one of the local shields. Ballistic shields sure were great against bullets and arrows, but if he recalled correctly, he figured a shield made from Vorikha materials or voidstone would work better against magic-based attacks.
He eyed the Archmage, then glanced at the map he was building. It was shaping up to be an indoor facility about the size of a small mall, one where such a shield wouldâve come in handy. Of course, the walls sprung up first. Bit unfair that Kelmithus would know the layout and they wouldnât. But hey, stress inoculation, right? Plenty of ops where theyâd gone in blind.
Kelmithus didnât take too long. Once he finished construction, he approached them by the entrance. âHarken, for I would set forth a condition ere we commence. In the phases to come, you shall rely only on your helmets and the drone. All other tactical equipment are henceforth prohibited.â
Damn. No smoke grenades or flashbangs, then. Slight handicap, but nothing they couldnât work around. IVAS and comms were still available to them, which was the important part.
âUnderstood. Weâre ready.â
âVery well.â Kelmithus walked into the facility, disappearing past the entryway as he no doubt made his way to his respective starting point. Took a couple minutes, but his voice finally popped up again. âThirty minutes. You may begin.â
The entryway opened into a narrow corridor that, by the 20 meter mark, split into three tunnels. From what Dr. Anderson could tell, all three converged 30 meters ahead into what looked like a chamber. The initial corridors had low ceilings, about a story. As their drone progressed, the space opened up. Some areas stretched upwards to 5 or 6 meters, with a visible second level. No clear choke points aside from the tunnels, but plenty of blind corners and crevices along the way.
The two-story space itself reminded him of the expanses within a castle, complete with a large staircase. Past it, chambers of varying sizes dotted the layout. Some were the size of living rooms while others opened into multi-story spaces with balconies and overlooks. Among these, one stood out â a cavern-like space that mustâve been near the center of the complex. Interestingly, the highest floor had lines of sight throughout most of the makeshift facility. Perfect spot for a sniper.
The journey there was easy enough, but between the initial drone scouting and the actual transit, theyâd already used up 10 minutes. They covered about half of the facility, leaving 20 minutes for the other half plus scoring on Kelmithus. It was time to explore the T-junction ahead. Isaacâs vantage point up top showed a lot, but not quite where the left and right paths led to.
They probably could use the drone itself to map out the rest of the facility, but itâd be cutting it close. Though, it seemed like they didnât need to.
âMovement on the right path,â Dr. Anderson corroborated what Henry just saw.
âSend the drone ahead. Hayes, Owens.â He tilted his head toward the path.
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They consolidated into the same triangle formation they used in the second phase, Ron at the point. As they approached the junction, Henry caught sight of a sliver of stained gray â Kelmithusâ protective gear. He moved around the corner, seemingly unaware of their presence.
He didnât think itâd be this easy, but hey, it wasnât implausible that he made a mistake. The moment Ron peeked around the corner, he sent a burst of paintballs at the target. Instead of the satisfying splat of a hit, they passed right through. The figure subsequently shimmered and vanished like smoke.
âIllusion,â Ron muttered.
Before Henry could process this, movement flickered in his peripheral vision. Two more Kelmithuses appeared, one at the end of the left path and one straight ahead from their position. Both were moving, one appearing to cast a spell while the other ducked behind cover.
He immediately shot at the one behind them to the left path. Another fizzle and puff of smoke. Another illusion. Ryan confirmed that his target had been an illusion as well.
âCaptain, the illusions didnât have any heat sigs,â Dr. Anderson informed.
Henry nodded. Switching to infrared would be smart. It was a great callout, but time was already halfway up. Where was the real Archmage while they chased shadows?
The other copies they encountered walked through doorways, hid in corners, pretended to charge at them, and generally mimicked human movements, but it seemed that was all they could do. From the looks of things, they couldnât actually cast spells or interact with physical objects. They had no physical or magical presence. They werenât threats, just distractions.
If there was one thing he was certain of, it was that Kelmithus was waiting for the perfect opportunity to attack. They could spend the rest of the time running circles to no avail, or they could take the bait. The more disadvantageous their position, the more likely it was that Kelmithus would swoop in for the kill.
It was a shitty plan, but with time running low and Kelmithus anywhere on the field, it would have to do. âNew plan,â Henry announced. âWeâre gonna chase one of the illusions. Make it look good.â
Ron nodded, sprinting ahead toward the Kelmithus decoy on the right. Henry and Ryan fell in behind him.
The illusory Archmage led them on a merry chase, always just out of reach. Henry played the part, deliberately missing shots like a stormtrooper just to sell the act. To Kelmithus, it would hopefully look like they were falling for the trap hook, line, and sinker.
âDead end ahead,â Anderson warned. âNarrow passage, opens into a small chamber with a lot of pillars. One other exit.â
Perfect. Henry grinned. âYen, you got eyes?â
âAffirmative,â Isaac replied. âBut itâs a tight angle. Canât see the corners. Youâre gonna have to draw him toward the main entrance or out the side.â
âCopy.â Henry pushed forward. Kelmithus was in here; there was no doubt about it. But⦠he couldnât see him. He wasnât behind any of the pillars.
Right then, he heard the telltale sign of earth magic â the crackling of rocks, coming from above. Ron dodged instantly, rolling to take cover by a pillar. Henry followed, jumping toward his own pillar right as a series of shards bombarded the ground.
âFuck!â Ryan hissed. âLost a shield!â
It was a nasty ambush, but not one they didnât expect. Kelmithus stood on an outcropping of rock, a small foothold that was connected to the structure itself. It slid down one of the pillars before landing with equal gentleness and quickness.
Kelmithus leapt off, three moving walls of earth forming around him as he descended. The best they could do was suppress the Archmage; there was no chance their paintballs were ever gonna penetrate those barriers.
The moving wallsâ surfaces bubbled before launching more earthen shards, completely suppressing them behind the pillars. At the same time, the ground beneath them began to liquefy, threatening to sink them ankle-deep in quicksand. Talk about getting caught between a rock and a hard place. Or in this case, a soft place. They had to do something.
Not willing to risk getting caught by the quicksand, Henry burst from the side, pelting Kelmithusâ position with a barrage of paintballs. Ron and Ryan followed suit without hesitation, syncing perfectly as they struck the Archmageâs barriers from multiple angles.
Kelmithusâ earth walls shifted rapidly, trying to block incoming fire from all directions. With three separate â and moving â attack vectors, he certainly couldnât cover them all and the accuracy of his shard counterattacks showed. This was it. That divided attention, that split second lapse in judgment was all Isaac needed.
A single shot splattered against Kelmithusâ shoulder. The Archmage froze, the earthen walls crumbling around him. He raised his hand, calling the hit before congratulating them. âMost commendable. I trust your prowess in the final trial shall prove equally remarkable.â
Huh, the old man actually sounded impressed. Henry bit back a smirk. âIâm looking forward to it.â
Well, not the fact that theyâd be going up against the near-pinnacle of magic with only paintball guns. That was definitely not something to look forward to. Seeing what was possible, though? Seeing just how far their tactics could go? Now that was something he could look forward to.
âPray, would you clear the area?â Kelmithus tapped his staff on the ground, causing the structures to flow back into the earth.
Right. Henry jerked his head towards the sidelines. Once he and his team were back at the tents, Kelmithus raised his staff to begin construction on the fourth and final map.
âSo,â he turned to the others. âThoughts?â
âThat was bullshit.â The words came out of Ryanâs mouth like he was just waiting to say it. âWouldnât be down a shield if it werenât for that spellcrap.â
Ron chuckled. âYeah, bruh. No kidding. How the hell we supposed to counter that? What if he just makes an earth dome around hismelf? No shot our paintballs are gonna do shit.â
Andersonâs face said it all: it was one hell of an uphill battle. And if the third phase was a simple hill, the last phase would probably be Mount Everest. âIt does seem rather⦠stacked against us.â
Henry sighed. Yeah, he didnât like the odds either, but⦠âIâm sure Kelâs factoring that in. He wouldnât set up an impossible scenario. This is more about yâknow, adaptability. Stress test. Iâm sure heâs not interested in our ability to punch through solid rock.â
âFair point,â Ron said.
The rumbling earth finally stilled â that was a bit quick. Kelmithusâ voice came through their earpieces, âThe final arena is prepared. Alpha Team, are you ready?â
âYeah,â Henry responded. âLetâs do it.â
âVery well. You may begin.â
Henry signaled the team forward. The structureâs exterior was similar to the previous map â just a large cube with straight walls. The interior, just as similar. Natural light filtered in through holes in the roof, their positioning speaking volumes about Kelmithusâ tactical thinking. The lights covered the main walkway and possibly other open spaces throughout the rest of the structure, whereas hidden corners remained dark. In other words, they couldnât see the enemy, but the enemy could sure as hell see them.
âLightingâs ass,â Ron pointed out.
âYeah.â Henry switched to night vision. The world shifted to crisp black and white, as the phosphor tubes activated. Better contrast and depth perception compared to the green murk they used to have, but it still felt like looking through a high-end security camera.
Kelmithus had to know the light â or lack thereof â wouldnât be a problem. So what was his play? Force them to use night vision? Henry looked up. The light pouring through the hole in the ceiling blazed through the IVASâ night vision, making everything else fade into deep shadows.
Seemed Ryan had the same idea. âBetter to use flashlights.â
It was the better of their alternatives. Flashlights carried an increase risk of exposure, but it was preferable to getting a bedsheet pulled over their heads and getting skullfucked by one of Kelmithusâ traps.
They secured a small antechamber of sorts near the entryway. It reminded him of the lobby in the Baranthurian site. Packed dirt walls surrounded them, the only other exit a single corridor that stretched ahead.
âDoc.â
Dr. Anderson deployed the Black Hornet. It zipped down the corridor, its feed populating Henryâs HUD. As it explored more of the map, it became obvious why the lobby felt so similar â the entire place mustâve been modeled after a Baranthurian facility. That aside, there was one other thought, this one much more pressing.
Oh great, another CQB shitshow. He couldnât say he didnât expect this, but it still didnât change the fact that he hated what he saw: tight corridors, glorified closets that would probably go for $3,000 a month in New York, earthen barriers, and all manner of corners and blind spots that just made him feel bad for Ron. Well, and wish again for a ballistic shield.
The first few rooms off the main corridor were barren, save for half-hearted attempts at cover â little more than lumps of packed earth masquerading as furniture. Kelmithus hadn't wasted much effort here.
The more the drone pushed in, the more the details sharpened. Complex room layouts with tight chokepoints and barriers, better-defined shapes. Then, bingo. The drone's camera panned across a room that practically screamed âboss fightâ. A tight chokepoint entrance opened into a space cluttered with eerily human-shaped mounds of earth. And there, tucked behind it all, a flash of stained gear.
Henryâs jaw clenched. This wasnât a challenge â it was a fucking invitation. Kelmithus might as well have painted a giant âXâ on the floor.
âWell, thatâs not obvious at all,â Henry muttered. âThatâs gotta be the target room. Kel ainât hidââ
A brilliant flash filled the droneâs feed, followed by a black rectangle emblazoned with âNO SIGNALâ.
âWell, he certainly isnât hiding at all,â Dr. Anderson said.
It was a trap, but one they couldnât move around. The rules were simple â neutralize Kelmithus or fail the phase. Sure, itâd be tough without equipment, but breaching was breaching. No point in overthinking it. âYeah. Letâs move.â
It was a straight shot through. Of course, they still pied each room as a courtesy, in case Kelmithus managed an upgraded illusion trick. They found nothing. Kelmithus was serious about wanting that fight.
They eventually came across the final room, Ron covering the left angle while Ryan covered the right. No shots from within, even as they peeked.
Kelmithus must be crouched behind one of the many rows of barriers. All Henry could see were those earthen mounds, which only looked even creepier up close. He glanced at the EMF readings on his HUD. Completely normal, despite the elevated ambient mana. The decoys themselves didnât seem to radiate any mana.
âNo cores,â Ron said, weapon trained on one of the decoys.
Henry recalled their test back at the Adventurerâs Guild. âNo cores, so we donât have to worry about golems?â
âDonât think so.â
Henry sighed. Without access to any other gear, their options were severely limited. âWeâre just gonna have to sweep the rows.â
Ron and Ryan went in first, clearing their respective corners. Henry followed suit, covering the central aisle. The first row was empty, save for a bunch of Kelmithus statues in various positions, all taking aim at the door with dirt staffs. No heat sigs among them.
They cleared the first row of barriers, starting to move onto the second row. Then Henry heard it.
âHark, earth beneath. Gather into cylinders, then compact with great pressure. Bond and harden as the finest steelâ¦â
Shit, an incantation, and a bit of a long one at that. Let the old man finish and deal with whatever spell he conjured? Or rush in, risk the trap, but maybe disrupt the cast? What if he was doing the same trick he did against the Nobians? What if this was a powerful new spell and he actually needed an incantation to cast it?
Fuck it. Risk, reward. âPush! Stop the spell!â
Henry pushed forward, marker up. Sounded like he was in the far corner, the furthest Kelmithus could possibly be from the entrance. No grenades to throw, and no peeking Archmage to take a shot at from this range. He needed to get to the final row for line of sight.
â... Lesser motes, compress and taper. Form yourselves as rounded arrowheadsâ¦â
Whatever Kel was cooking up, it was taking its sweet time. And from the sounds of cylinders and rounded arrowheads, it was probably a new spell inspired by their guns. Impressive, but also horrifying. Talk about cultural contamination gone wrong.
âClear,â Ron called from up ahead, darting past the second row of barriers.
Henry kept his sights on Kelmithusâ little corner, ready to advance alongside Ron when â
âFuckinâ bollocks! Itâs the statues! Theyâre animated and hostile!â
Doc? Henry whipped around, coming face-to-face with one such statue throwing a haymaker at him. He ducked instinctively, the packed earth fist whistling over his head. His marker came up, squeezing off two quick shots center mass. The statueâs chest erupted in a spray of paint and dirt before crumbling to the ground like a sandcastle hit by a wave.
Holy shit. These were the dirt piles theyâd ignored. Moving. Twisting. Throwing hands, of all things. Lumps of earth stretching into something way too human-like for comfort. But how? They didnât have cores, for fuckâs sake. Thatâs why theyâd dismissed them in the first place.
âDocâs down a shield!â Isaac reported.
Fantastic. As if the Archmageâs casting wasnât enough of a headache. They couldnât let the constructs stop them, though. Who knew how screwed theyâd be if Kelmithus managed to complete his incantation.
âWeâre cutting through!â Henry ordered.
They got past the fourth row of barriers, somehow. Halfway to Kelmithus. But how the hell were they supposed to keep fighting this swarm? Take one of the statues down and three more seemed to replace it. It helped that they were pretty fragile, but there were just too damn many of them.
âMagic bullshitâ¦â Henry heard Ryan mutter.
No kidding. Henry ducked under a wild swing, then drove his elbow into the attackerâs face. The thingâs head just⦠disintegrated. Okay, that was kinda satisfying. This wasnât something they could keep up forever though.
â... Fyrite, gather beneath the motesâ¦â
âEMFâs rising,â Ron said.
Not much time left. Where had he heard âfyriteâ before? Shit, was it when Sera talked about blasting a Ravalisk sky high?
â... Flame, erupt with furious might. Ignite within these earthen chambersâ¦â
The ground quivered beneath his boots just as he bolted past the fifth row and entered the sixth. It was so subtle, a faint vibration that would have otherwise been easy to miss if not for Kelmithusâ training earlier. It was hard to believe that Kelmithus was really throwing this at them while controlling the statues and crafting a new spell. Tier 9 was no joke.
âJump! Roots!â
Henry sprang into the air as the ground exploded beneath him. Damn dirt tentacles everywhere, writhing like something out of a hentai nightmare. He twisted, feeling one brush his calf. Too close. He hit the ground hard, rolling to disperse the impact before bringing up his marker to dispatch another group of statues.
A strangled yell to his left. Ryan. Henryâs head snapped around just in time to see one of those earthen bastards latch onto the poor guyâs ankle, snaking up his leg faster than heâd seen even in that one anime Ron had him watch. âFuck! Iâm hit!â
Isaac suffered the same fate. Henry caught a glimpse of him thrashing. âCanât break it!â
Henry looked ahead. âOwens, you good?â
â... Earth and flame, join in wrathful propulsionâ¦â
âAffirmââ Ron cut off his own reply. âOh shâ GET DOWN!â
âLoose your barrage, Earth Artillery!â
Henry barely had the time to duck under one of the barriers when a deep rumble shook the ground. A hellish shriek filled the air as Kelmithusâ spell tore through the room. The barrier above him exploded, showering him with dirt and rock fragments.
Holy fuck.
A statue to his left caught the full brunt of one of the bullets. It got completely vaporized. No warning, no mercy â it just⦠ceased to exist. One second it was there, the next it was a rapidly expanding cloud of pulverized earth â or at this point, fine sand.
Apparently that wasnât the end of it. He took a moment to survey the devastation. Barriers that had seemed solid moments ago were similarly vaporized. Not just the barriers, but the literal walls as well. He could see the next two rooms over from the holes in the walls.
Wait, were their shields even rated for this?
âAnyone hit?â Henry asked.
âDocâs eliminated and Iâm down one,â Isaac replied. âHayes still holdinâ up.â
Ron turned his head back, taking a look at the faint shimmer around Henry. âYeah, youâre also down a shield.â
When had that happened? Henry didnât even remember getting hit. The shrapnel from the exploding walls, maybe?
He didnât dwell on it. Whatâs more important was the fact that it was quiet. Kelmithus must be out of ammo.
He risked a peek over the remnants of his cover.
A firebolt over his head forced him back under, but he got all the intel he needed. The earth barrels were falling apart like early railgun prototypes, barely able to sustain that initial volley before getting ripped apart by their own forces. One and done, just like those the DoDâs first attempts at electromagnetic weapons. And the statues? Vaporized by their creatorâs own spell. Hooray for friendly fire, as long as it happened on the other side.
With the field clear and Kelmithusâ spell out of juice, it was clear as day. This was it â their window of opportunity.
âHeâs dry!â Henry barked. âMove!â
He had already hopped over his shattered cover before the words were fully out of his mouth. The battlefield was an obstacle course of cratered earth and pulverized barriers, but it was sure easier to navigate without a horde of Kelmithus mannequins.
Twenty feet. A leap over a mound of dirt.
Fifteen. Sidestep a small crater.
Ten. Incoming icicles and firebolts. Slide under a partially collapse wall.
Five. Suppressive fire from Ron.
Kelmithusâ eyes widened, staff aimed at Henry as firebolts formed just over his shoulder. Too little, too late. Henry opened fire.
Paint bloomed across Kelmithusâ chest just as three firebolts erupted.
Henry tensed, but the magical projectiles fizzled out halfway, dissipating into harmless sparks and smoke. Kelmithus lowered his staff, his hand rising in the universal âIâm outâ signal.
âWell played, Captain,â he said.
âWhew,â Henry let out a breath, lowering his marker. âThanks. You certainly didnât make it easy.â
Kelmithus chuckled. âIndeed, it would be a disservice to offer aught but a genuine challenge. Oneâs mettle is best honed against the most formidable of trials, or so Captain Sinclair spoke of your practices as a warrior.â
With a wave of his staff, the arena began to crumble, sinking back into the earth.
Damn, the sunlight was bright. Henry gestured back to the tents as he shielded his eyes. âLetâs head back for our AAR.â
Ron jogged to catch up with them, something clearly on his mind. âSay, Kel⦠that Earth Artillery spell was some crazy shit.â
Kelmithus smiled. ââSome crazy shitâ, it was indeed.â Was that pride in his voice? âRather mana-intensive though, I must admit. It demands simultaneous mastery over earth and fire, not to mention exacting control over myriad projectiles.â
âSounds draining,â Isaac said, swiping off the dirt from his legs where he got animeâd.
âVerily,â Kelmithus concurred, his prideful smile only growing. âThe spell draws inspiration from your firearms, you see. The earth forms both barrel and projectile, while fire and fyrite provide the propulsive force. Where the mechanisms of a gun handle the attack, each process of this spell requires intense focus.â
If that was what a Tier 9 magic user was like, then they were up against some serious threats. Ryan, of course, was already thinking ahead. âHow long you reckon you can keep that up?â
âIn true combat? My mana capacity permits mayhap ten such attacks of that caliber. Fifteen if I were to be fully rested, and have supplementary artifacts. It is a devastating opening gambit, but not one to be sustained. As youâve seen, the barrels crumble after but one volley, and the casting time is lengthy.â
âHmm,â Dr. Anderson mused. âA trade off, then? Proper damage output, but leaves you vulnerable?â
Kelmithus nodded. âIn magical combat, as in your means of war, judicious use of oneâs resources is paramount. Overreach,â he lifted a statue from the ground before slamming an earth spike into it, âand you may find yourself bereft of defense at a critical moment.â
âHuh. And those decoys?â Henry asked, tilting his head toward the statue that Kelmithus had just demonstrated on. âDidnât expect them to come to life like that. Thought we had âem figured out when we didnât detect any cores.â
Kelmithus raised up another statue, having it walk alongside them. âA touch of guile oft proves invaluable in combat. While autonomous constructs such as golems require cores, a mage may directly animate and control forms without. It is more taxing, to be sure, but affords great adaptability and the element of surprise.â
Ron whistled low. âNo kidding. Damn near took a shield off with that surprise.â
âAdvanced magic tactics revolve around diversion â to compel you to contend on multiple fronts at once that you may be overwhelmed.â
Henry took off his helmet as they reached the tents. âCanât rely on our EMF readings to pre scan for threats, then.â
Kelmithus pointed to a nearby tree and demonstrated. Several acorn-like objects flew from its branches, slamming into a random part of the clearing. âAnything subject to magic can become an extension of a mageâs will. Walls, floors, trees, nay, even the air itself.â
Isaac sighed. âDamn. How are we supposed to keep track of all that?â
Kelmithus stroked his beard. âAs it happens, I may have just the thing. Should you wish to learn of such tactics, I could arrange for you to observe training sessions at the Eldralore Academy. Weâve a forthcoming competition that may interest you and your researchers.â
Henry raised his eyebrows. âOh?â
The Archmage explained, âThere, students of diverse disciplines vie, and youâll see quite the array of spells and techniques. As I shall be busy for the next few weeks, this would provide an excellent opportunity to study various spell types, their tells, and countermeasures. Furthermore, youâd have the chance to observe mages of varying proficiency. It is one matter to face a seasoned Archmage,â he said, pausing, âbut quite another to contend with the unpredictability of a novice.â
Ron nodded. âMhmm. Canât know what the enemy is thinking if the enemy doesnât know what heâs thinking.â
âAptly said,â Kelmithus laughed. âIn addition to spectating the competition, I could also arrange for you to sit in on some theoretical classes. Understanding the principles underlying spell construction wonât be very useful without magic, but they may prove insightful nevertheless.â
âSounds like a solid opportunity.â Henry looked to his team. Everyone seemed interested, excited, or both. âI bet Owens here is already creaming at the thought of it. Say, what does this competition entail anyway?â